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Dinoflagellate Host Chloroplasts and Mitochondria Remain Functional During Infection. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Dinoflagellates, important parts of phytoplankton, often host parasites that can digest their nuclei, which impacts the dinoflagellates' metabolism and energy production.
  • - A study showed that despite the digestion of the dinoflagellate nucleus by the parasite, its chloroplasts remained functional throughout the infection, maintaining photosystem II activity.
  • - The research indicated that light increased parasite production and that organelles like mitochondria and chloroplasts continued to function better than nuclear genes during the infection, suggesting a mutual benefit for both the parasite and the host's bioenergetic systems.

Article Abstract

Dinoflagellates are major components of phytoplankton that play critical roles in many microbial food webs, many of them being hosts of countless intracellular parasites. The phototrophic dinoflagellate (Dinophyceae) can be infected by the microeukaryotic parasitoids spp. (Syndiniales), some of which primarily target and digest the host nucleus. Early digestion of the nucleus at the beginning of the infection is expected to greatly impact the host metabolism, inducing the knockout of the organellar machineries that highly depend upon nuclear gene expression, such as the mitochondrial OXPHOS pathway and the plastid photosynthetic carbon fixation. However, previous studies have reported that chloroplasts remain functional in swimming host cells infected by . We report here a multi-approach monitoring study of organelles over a complete infection cycle by nucleus-targeting sp. strain A120. Our results show sustained and efficient photosystem II activity as a hallmark of functional chloroplast throughout the infection period despite the complete digestion of the host nucleus. We also report the importance played by light on parasite production, i.e., the amount of host biomass converted to parasite infective propagules. Using a differential gene expression analysis, we observed an apparent increase of all 3 mitochondrial and 9 out of the 11 plastidial genes involved in the electron transport chains (ETC) of the respiration pathways during the first stages of the infection. The longer resilience of organellar genes compared to those encoded by the nucleus suggests that both mitochondria and chloroplasts remain functional throughout most of the infection. This extended organelle functionality, along with higher parasite production under light conditions, suggests that host bioenergetic organelles likely benefit the parasite sp. A120 and improve its fitness during the intracellular infective stage.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7793755PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.600823DOI Listing

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